My college life was enjoyable, simple, and mostly free from serious pressure. I used to attend classes only three days a week, so I had plenty of time for rest, casual activities, and a relaxed routine. At that time, I was not thinking deeply about the future because everything around me felt manageable. Studies did not seem too difficult, and I believed life would continue in the same easy way. My attention was more on comfort and enjoyment than on preparing myself for the next academic stage. Because of this, I did not fully understand how different university life would be from college life. As my intermediate studies moved closer to an end, I slowly started feeling that this relaxed phase was temporary. Thoughts about admissions, higher education, family expectations, and career responsibilities began to appear more seriously in my mind. That was the first time I felt a shift inside myself. I realized that the comfortable routine I had enjoyed for so long would not last forever. A much harder phase was waiting ahead, and it would require discipline, focus, and mental maturity. This realization was important because it marked the end of carefree thinking and the beginning of a more serious understanding of my future.